User login

You are here

Public Libraries

GVDeane sent overThis Look at the \"Millennium Library\", a new public library in Cerritos, CA. They say The idea—to create an e-learning experience for kids and adults—went beyond just providing Internet access to patrons through library kiosks. \"We wanted to create a library everyone would enjoy as a gathering place for the community for a shared learning experience,\" said Fred Ying, MIS manager for city of Cerritos.

This NYTimes Story, sent in by Jen Young, says increasingly, librarians, fearing irrelevancy in the age of Google, are chasing their patrons in cyberspace, and around the clock. And many people are responding. They highlight some neat new services.

James Nimmo passed along a bit more info on the WA story. \"FindLaw
has an AP story that says A proposed ballot initiative - which has not yet qualified for the Nov. 5 ballot - would close seven of nine county-run libraries. It may be the first effort in the country to abolish a library system by popular vote, according to the American Library Association.

Three-hundred miles from the high-tech, high-paying jobs of the Seattle area, Stevens County\'s 40,000 residents include loggers, farmers and backwoods survivalists who make do with a median household income of $33,387 a year. A magnesium plant that was the county\'s largest private employer closed last year.

Natalie Hansen Takes A Look at the home schoolers, and how they are affected by increased fees and charges, and other cuts at libraries.

\"Anyone who depends on the public library, especially home-school families, are going to be greatly affected because they don\'t have anywhere else they can obtain the resources they need for educational purposes,\" she said. \"A lot of the things from the home-schoolers\' curriculum are found here at the library.\"

SPTimes.com has this on The Palm Harbor Library and how they offer dolls and puzzles designed for those with special needs.The Palm Harbor Library recently purchased about 60 of these toys and is making them available for circulation. Parents with children who are disabled can use their library cards to check out these toys, just like books.

Bob Young, over at The Seattle Times says Seattle Public Library spends so much on salaries and so little on books that City Librarian Deborah Jacobs was left with little choice when forced to trim library spending by 4 percent. Seattle\'s 23 public libraries will close after tomorrow for a week, and again on Dec. 17 for another week, shaving library spending through unpaid wages for those two weeks.

Seattle Public Library pays beginning librarians $46,500 — about one-third more than Denver and Boston. In five years, beginning librarians in Seattle will see their salaries climb to $56,472 under their union contract. In addition, they\'ll get annual cost-of-living increases.

This One from Lew Rockwell is, no doubt, worth a read.
Llewellyn says many public libraries have been a disgrace for decades, and, like most public institutions, they are architectural monstrosities. \"They have terrible hours, which they blame on underfunding. Their selection is often severely limited, vacillating between being out of date and carrying only the latest, tackiest bestsellers. Others have gradually purged all books that offer ideas the ruling regime rejects.\"

\"We Americans naively look at the library as our birthright, often unaware that a free public library system is far from universal. The Bill of Rights doesn\'t guarantee the freedom to read. But the American library network hands this priceless gift to anyone who\'s interested upon a silver platter.\"

A group of antitax crusaders is trying to dissolve the county\'s libraries. Leaders of the campaign to eliminate the Stevens County Rural Library District said they are tired of paying property taxes for something that helps people largely in the most out-of-the-way crannies of the county, where a majority of the county libraries lie. Besides, they said, rural libraries are increasingly obsolete because of the Internet, video outlets and discount bookstores . . .

\"With all the property I own, I\'m probably paying up to $500 in taxes for the library, and that\'s just $500 wasted on something we don\'t need,\" said one supporter of the measure, Dave Sitler, a real estate agent.

Charles Davis writes \" One library doubles as a laundry room, where a person can clean a month of dirty clothes and pick up a Churchill biography in a single stop. Another shares a roof with a state liquor store -- \"books \'n\'
booze,\" people call it in jest.

The libraries of Stevens County, bounded by the Canadian border, are among the most remote in the United
States. They are also threatened with extinction.
Story atSeattlePI \"